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Transplantation Reviewed by Sirapassorn Sornphiphatphong, M.D.
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Page 1: Transplantation

Transplantation

Reviewed by Sirapassorn

Sornphiphatphong, M.D.

Page 2: Transplantation

Overview

• Definition in transplantation

• Adaptive immune responses to allografts

• Graft rejection

• Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation

Page 3: Transplantation

Overview of Hematopoietic Stem

Cell Transplantation

• Sources of HSCT

• Donor selection and manipulation

of the graft

• Complications of HSCT

– Graft rejection

– Graft-versus-host disease

• HSCT for The Treatment of Primary

Immunodeficiency Disorders

Page 4: Transplantation

Transplantation

• Treatment for replacement of non-functioning

organs and tissues with healthy organs or

tissues

• Increasing during the past 45 years

• Hematopoietic stem cells, kidneys, livers, and

hearts

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Page 5: Transplantation

Transplantation

• Graft: cells, tissues, or organs

• Donor: provides the graft

• Recipient, host: who receives the graft

• Orthotopic transplantation; normal anatomic

location

• Heterotopic transplantation: different site

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Page 6: Transplantation

Transplantation

• Autologous graft: to the same individual

• Syngeneic graft: two genetically identical

individuals

• Allogeneic graft, allograft: between two

genetically different individuals of the same

species

• Xenogeneic graft , xenograft: different species

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Page 7: Transplantation

Adaptive immune responses

to Allografts

• Ag that stimulate adaptive immune responses

against allografts are histocompatibility

proteins

• Strong rejection reactions; major

histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules

• Weak or slower rejection reactions; minor

histocompatibility antigens

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Page 8: Transplantation

Adaptive immune responses to Allografts

• Allogeneic MHC molecules of a graft can be

presented for recognition by the recipient’s T

cells in 2 different ways; the direct and indirect

pathways

• Direct allorecognition can generate both

CD4+ and CD8+ T cells that recognize graft

antigens and contribute to rejection

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Page 9: Transplantation

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Page 10: Transplantation

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Page 11: Transplantation

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Page 12: Transplantation

Graft rejection

• Classified on the basis of histopathologic

features and the time course of rejection

after transplantation

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 13: Transplantation

Hyperacute Rejection

• Thrombotic occlusion of the graft vasculature

• Within minutes to hours after host blood vessels are anastomosed to graft vessels

• Mediated by preexisting antibodies in the host circulation that bind to donor endothelial antigens

Page 14: Transplantation

Acute Rejection

• Injury to the graft parenchyma and blood vessels mediated by alloreactive T cells and antibodies

• Several days to a few weeks

• Immunosuppression

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Page 15: Transplantation

Chronic Rejection and Graft

Vasculopathy

• In the kidney and heart: vascular occlusion and

interstitial fibrosis

• Lung transplants: thickened small airways (called

bronchiolitis obliterans)

• Liver transplants: fibrotic and non-functional bile ducts

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Page 16: Transplantation

Prevention and Treatment of

Allograft Rejection

• Minimize alloantigenic differences between

the donor and recipient

• ABO blood typing: avoid hyperacute rejection

• HLA alleles

– HLA-A, HLA-B, and HLA-DR

– Zero-antigen mismatches predict the best

survival

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Page 17: Transplantation

Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation

Page 18: Transplantation

Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation

• HLA discovery in 1968

• Human stem cell transplantation (HSCT)

provide treatment for a variety of

congenital and acquired disorders; SCID

in 1968

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 19: Transplantation

Sources of hematopoietic stem cells for transplantation

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 20: Transplantation

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 21: Transplantation

Bone marrow stem cells

• Multiple aspirations along the iliac crests under general anesthesia

• 500 mL- 1 L depended on the type of transplant and on the weight of the recipient

• HLA-identical transplantation – injected intravenously without further manipulation

into a central line in the recipient

• Mismatched transplantation – T-cell depleted and injected intravenously

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 22: Transplantation

Peripheral blood stem cells • G-CSF to the donor, 10 μg/kg/day x 5 days

• Purified by positive selection, enumerated and

injected

Cord blood • Collected in heparinized medium and stored in

liquid nitrogen, and small aliquots are preserved

for HLA typing

• Thawed and injected into the recipient without

further manipulation

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 23: Transplantation

Donor selection and manipulation

of the graft

Page 24: Transplantation

HSCT from a related HLA-identical donor

• Best for rapid engraftment and immune

reconstitution

• The mature T cells contained in the graft provide

a first line of immune reconstitution after

transplant

• Rapid increase circulating T lymphocytes 2

weeks after HSCT

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 25: Transplantation

HSCT from a haploidentical donor

• No such donor is available

• based on the ability of donor-derived stem cells

to repopulate the recipient’s vestigial thymus

and give rise to fully mature T lymphocytes

• life-saving procedure of SCID infants

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 26: Transplantation

T-cell depletion

• Soybean lectin: agglutination of mature marrow cells and

removed by sedimentation

• E-rosetting (with sheep erythrocytes) and density

gradient centrifugation

• Incubation of the marrow with monoclonal

antibodies to T lymphocytes plus complement; Campath-1G, Leu 1

• Positive selection of CD34+ cells using monoclonal

antibody affinity

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 27: Transplantation

HSCT from matched unrelated donors

• Increasingly used to treat severe primary

immunodeficiencies

• Bone Marrow Donors Worldwide (BMDW)

registry

• 3–4 months to identify a MUD

• Preparative chemotherapy regimen in the

recipient (even in the case of SCID) and graft

versus-host prophylaxis

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 28: Transplantation

HSCT using unmanipulated cord blood

• Lower risk of GvHD than with MUD

• Based on the urgency of the transplant, the cell

dose required, and the number of HLA

disparities

• Requires pre-transplant conditioning and GvHD

prophylaxis, irrespective of the underlying

disease

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 29: Transplantation

Sources of hematopoietic stem cells for transplantation

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 30: Transplantation

Complications of hematopoietic

stem cell transplantation

• Conditioning regimen toxicity

– affect several organs e.g. busulfan-lung

damage, veno-occlusive disease

– anemia, thrombocytopenia, and leukopenia

• Graft rejection

• Graft-versus-host disease

• Infections

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 31: Transplantation

Graft rejection

• Immunocompetent cells in the host specifically recognize and react to donor-derived stem cells

– the degree of immunocompetence of the host

– the degree of HLA disparity

– the number of stem cells infused

– the type of conditioning regimen used

– the possible pre-sensitization of the host to donor histocompatibility antigens

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 32: Transplantation

Graft rejection

• SCID, graft rejection unlikely because of

the profound immunodeficiency

• Regimen: busulfan + cyclophosphamide,

± antithymocyte globulin (ATG)

• Phagocytic or hemophagocytic cell

disorders, a more aggressive conditioning

regimen

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 33: Transplantation

Acute graft-versus-host disease

• Donor-derived T lymphocytes to the recipient’s

antigens

• Early as 1 week after HSCT

• Potentially fatal

• The major risk factors for aGvHD include

– HLA mismatch

– Older age of the recipient

– Gender mismatch

– Prior herpes virus infection

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 34: Transplantation

Acute GvHD

• Highgrade fever, MP rash (confluent),

exfoliative dermatitis, diarrhea, and liver

abnormalities (hepatomegaly, ↑elevated

liver enzymes, jaundice), protein-losing

enteropathy, abdominal pain

• Third space loss

• Bone marrow aplasia, high susceptibility to

infections

Abbas AK, et al. Cellular and molecular immunology Ed 8th

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 35: Transplantation
Page 36: Transplantation

Chronic GvHD

• Symptoms persist or appear after 100 days

• Skin changes (scleroderma-like lesions,

hyperpigmentation, hyperkeratosis, skin atrophy,

ulcerations), tissue fibrosis, limitation of joint

motility

• Fibrosis of exocrine glands (sicca syndrome),

fibrosis of lungs and liver, immune dysregulation

and autoimmunity

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 37: Transplantation

Chronic GvHD

• Acute GvHD represents a major risk factor for

cGvHD

• Older age of the recipient

• Transplantation from a multiparous female donor

into a male recipient

• Minor histocompatibility incompatibility

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 38: Transplantation

Prevention of GvHD

• Fully matched donor

• T-cell depleted HLA-mismatched donor

• Pharmacological GvHD prophylaxis

– Cyclosporine A daily for 6 months,

or methotrexate (15 mg/m2 on the first day, and then

10 mg/m2 at day 3, 6

– or combination

– ATG

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 39: Transplantation

Treatment of GvHD

• Immunosuppressive drugs

• Steroids, ATG, mycophenolate mofetil, cyclosporine A, monoclonal antibodies directed to HLA (anti-CD3) or to Th1-type cytokines (anti-TNF-α) and cytokine receptors (anti-CD25, daclizumab)

• Topical steroids and calcineurin inhibitors may alleviate mucosal and skin symptoms

• Ursodeoxycholic acid may be useful in cGvHD with significant liver involvement

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 40: Transplantation

Infections

• Adenovirus, CMV, EBV, parainfluenzae III

virus. PCP, aspergillus, bacterial infection

• Viral infection after HSCT may cause

interstitial pneumonia, enteritis, and

encephalitis

• EBV cause B-cell lymphoproliferative

disease (BLPD)

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 41: Transplantation

HSCT for The Treatment of

Primary Immunodeficiency

Disorders

Page 42: Transplantation

HSCT for SCID

• Immune suppression is not required

• No conditioning regimen is necessary in related

HLA-identical donor

• US centers adopt same policy for T cell-depleted

mismatched HSCT

• European centers tend to use conditioning

regimens prior to mismatched or MUD HSCT,

particularly in SCID with residual autologous NK

Page 43: Transplantation

Survival following HSCT for SCID

• Related HLA-identical, MUD, and T cell-depleted

haploidentical HSCT were 100%, 94%, and 52%,

respectively

• Has improved over the years

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 44: Transplantation

Factors influence survival

• Younger age at transplantation leads to superior

survival

– Among 38 infants who were treated by Buckley and

collaborators before 3.5 months of age, 37 (97%)

have survived

• Co-trimoxazole prophylaxis for recipients

• Absence of pre-transplant pulmonary infection

among recipients

• Type of SCID

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 45: Transplantation

Factors influence survival

• Survival following related HLA-mismatched

HSCT is better in infants with B+ SCID than with

B− SCID (64% vs 36%, respectively)

• The poorer outcome in infants with B− SCID

may reflect the presence of autologous NK cells

detectable in most of these infants

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 46: Transplantation

Complications following HSCT for SCID

• 56% of all deaths were due to infections,

25% to GvHD, and 5% to BLPD (B-cell

lymphoproliferative disease)

• Immune dysregulation and autoimmunity

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 47: Transplantation

Quality and kinetics of T-cell

immune reconstitution

• The effectiveness of HSCT in SCID: the

normalization of the number and function of T

lymphocytes

• Reconstitution differs substantially depending on the

type of transplantation

• The kinetics of T-cell reconstitution influenced by the

recipient’s age

• Early transplantation (<3.5 months of age) leads to

superior thymic output

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 48: Transplantation

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 49: Transplantation

Quality and kinetics of T-cell immune reconstitution

Related HLA-identical donor

• The unmanipulated graft contains mature T lymphocytes

• expanded in 2 weeks

• Oligoclonal, have a memory (CD45R0) phenotype

• Fully competent, and provide the recipient with functional immunity

MUD

• Present mature T cells

• Conditioning regimen

partly impairs immune

development

• Naive (CD45RA+ CD31+)

T lymphocytes appear in

3–4 months

• Number tends to peak 1

year after HSCT

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 50: Transplantation

Quality and kinetics of T-cell immune reconstitution

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 51: Transplantation

• T-cell receptor excision circles (TRECs); extrachromosomal DNA

episomes generated during V(D)J recombination

• not duplicated during mitosis

• identify newly generated naive T lymphocytes

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 52: Transplantation

Quality and kinetics of T-cell immune reconstitution

• Quantification of TRECs

• assess engraftment of bona fide stem cells and

to monitor the persistence of immunity

• Decline by 10 years

• Possible that the SCID thymus is not able to

sustain active thymopoiesis for as long as a

normal thymus

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 53: Transplantation

Reconstitution of B- and NK-cell immunity

• ≥2 years to develop the engraftment of B cells

for SCID

• 6 of12 recipients of HLA-identical bone marrow,

and 21 of 76 patients treated by unconditioned T

cell-depleted haploidentical transplant had

evidence of donor-derived B lymphocytes

• 62 of 102 survivors were requiring intravenous

immunoglobulins

Buckley RH. Annu Rev Immunol 2004

Page 54: Transplantation

Reconstitution of B- and NK-cell immunity

• Depend on the nature of the genetic defect

• B+ SCID, IL7RA gene defect usually develop

normal B-cell immunity after HSCT even if no

donor-derived B cells are present

• γc or JAK3 deficiency (both of which

compromise B-cell function) often remain

dependent on immunoglobulin substitution

• More limited data are available about

reconstitution of NK cell function

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 55: Transplantation

HSCT for immunodeficiencies other than SCID

Page 56: Transplantation

HSCT for immunodeficiencies

other than SCID

• Residual T cell-mediated immunity

• pre-transplant conditioning regimen is

required, even HLA-identical donor

• Alternative donors (MUDs and cord blood)

• Medical emergency

• Clinical history and quality of life

Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 57: Transplantation

Survival following HSCT

• 23/79 HLA-identical transplant

• 13/79 by T cell-depleted haploidentical HSCT

• 43/79 by MUD HSCT

• The survival rates: 78.5%, 53.8%, 78.1% Rich RR, et al. Clinical Immunology principles and practice. Ed 3rd

Page 58: Transplantation

HSCT for immunodeficiencies other than SCID

HLA-identical Haploidentical MUD

Omenn’s syn 75% 41% 50%

MHC class II def 54% 32% -

WAS 87% 52% 71%

FHL 71% - 70%

Cartilage-hair

hypoplasia

Over all 50%

Purine nucleoside

phophorylate

Overall 50%

CD40L def Overall 46% at 25 yr of age

Page 59: Transplantation

Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome

• Early as 1968, with partial success

• Full correction following HSCT first in 1978

• Good outcome in HLA-identical HSCT

• MUD HSCT was effective especially <5 years

• Cord blood transplantation increasingly

Page 60: Transplantation

Cytotoxicity defects

• Familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (FHL)

– a stable donor chimerism ≥20% is sufficient to provide

long-term remission

– genetic testing is strongly recommended before HSCT

from a sibling is attempted

• Chediak–Higashi syndrome

– Better results with HSCT from HLA-identical siblings or

MUDs

– 3 patients, all are alive and in full remission

Page 61: Transplantation

HSCT for immunodeficiencies other than SCID

• Poor outcome in Interferon-Ƴ receptor 1

deficiency, IPEX syndrome

(Immunodysregulation,

polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy, X-

linked)